10 years ago today, I joined Canonical, on the very earliest version of the Ubuntu Server Team!

And in the decade since, I've had the tremendous privilege to work with so many amazing people, and the opportunity to contribute so much open source software to the Ubuntu ecosystem.

Marking the occasion, I've reflected about much of my work over that time period and thought I'd put down in writing a few of the things I'm most proud of (in chronological order)... Maybe one day, my daughters will read this and think their daddy was a real geek :-)

Throughout the history of UNIX, the "message of the day" was always manually edited and updated by the local system administrator. Until Ubuntu's message-of-the-day. In fact, I received an email from Dennis Ritchie and Jon "maddog" Hall, confirming this, in April 2010. This started as a feature request for the Landscape team, but has turned out to be tremendously useful and informative to all Ubuntu users. Just last year, we launched motd.ubuntu.com, which provides even more dynamic information about important security vulnerabilities and general news from the Ubuntu ecosystem. Mathias Gug help me with the design and publication.

This was the first public open source project I worked on, in my spare time at Canonical. I had a local copy of the Ubuntu archive and I was thinking about what sorts of automated jobs I could run on it. So I wrote some scripts that extracted the manpages out of each one, formatted them as HTML, and published into a structured set of web directories. 10 years later, it's still up and running, serving thousands of hits per day. In fact, this was one of the ways we were able to shrink the Ubuntu minimal image, but removing the manpages, since they're readable online. Colin Watson and Kees Cook helped me with the initial implementation, and Matthew Nuzum helped with the CSS and Ubuntu theme in the HTML.

If you know me at all, you know my passion for the command line UI/UX that is "Byobu". Byobu was born as the "screen-profiles" project, over lunch at Google in Mountain View, in December of 2008, at the Ubuntu Developer Summit. Around the lunch table, several of us (including Nick Barcet, Dave Walker, Michael Halcrow, and others), shared our tips and tricks from our own ~/.screenrc configuration files. In Cape Town, February 2010, at the suggestion of Gustavo Niemeyer, I ported Byobu from Screen to Tmux. Since Ubuntu Servers don't generally have GUIs, Byobu is designed to be a really nice interface to the Ubuntu command line environment.

I was familiar with eCryptfs from its inception in 2005, in the IBM Linux Technology Center's Security Team, sitting next to Michael Halcrow who was the original author. When I moved to Canonical, I helped Michael maintain the userspace portion of eCryptfs (ecryptfs-utils) and I shepherded into Ubuntu. eCryptfs was super powerful, with hundreds of options and supported configurations, but all of that proved far to difficult for users at large. So I set out to simplify it drastically, with an opinionated set of basic defaults. I started with a simple command to mount a "Private" directory inside of your home directory, where you could stash your secrets. A few months later, on a long flight to Paris, I managed to hack a new PAM module, pam_ecryptfs.c, that actually encrypted your entire home directory! This was pretty revolutionary at the time -- predating Apple's FileVault or Microsoft's Bitlocker, even. Today, tens of millions of Ubuntu users have used eCryptfs to secure their personal data. I worked closely with Tyler Hicks, Kees Cook, Jamie Strandboge, Michael Halcrow, Colin Watson, and Martin Pitt on this project over the years.

5. ssh-import-id (March 2010)

With the explosion of virtual machines and cloud instances in 2009 / 2010, I found myself constantly copying public SSH keys around. Moreover, given Canonical's globally distributed nature, I also regularly found myself asking someone for their public SSH keys, so that I could give them access to an instance, perhaps for some pair programming or assistance debugging. As it turns out, everyone I worked with, had a Launchpad.net account, and had their public SSH keys available there. So I created (at first) a simple shell script to securely fetch and install those keys. Scott Moser helped clean up that earliest implementation. Eventually, I met Casey Marshall, who helped rewrite it entirely in Python. Moreover, we contacted the maintainers of Github, and asked them to expose user public SSH keys by the API -- which they did! Now, ssh-import-id is integrated directly into Ubuntu's new subiquity installer and used by many other tools, such as cloud-init and MAAS.

In 2009, Canonical purchased 5 Dell laptops, which was the Ubuntu Server team's first "cloud". These laptops were our very first lab for deploying and testing Eucalyptus clouds. I was responsible for those machines at my house for a while, and I automated their installation with PXE, TFTP, DHCP, DNS, and a ton of nasty debian-installer preseed data. That said -- it worked! As it turned out, Scott Moser and Mathias Gug had both created similar setups at their houses for the same reason. I was mentoring a new hire at Canonical, named Andres Rodriquez at the time, and he took over our part-time hacks and we worked together to create the Orchestra project. Orchestra, itself was short lived. It was severely limited by Cobbler as a foundation technology. So the Orchestra project was killed by Canonical. But, six months later, a new project was created, based on the same general concept -- physical machine provisioning at scale -- with an entire squad of engineers led by...Andres Rodriguez :-) MAAS today is easily one of the most important projects the Ubuntu ecosystem and one of the most successful products in Canonical's portfolio.

7. pollinate / pollen / entropy.ubuntu.com (February 2014)

In 2013, I set out to secure Ubuntu at large from a set of attacks ranging from insufficient entropy at first boot. This was especially problematic in virtual machine instances, in public clouds, where every instance is, by design, exactly identical to many others. Moreover, the first thing that instance does, is usually ... generate SSH keys. This isn't hypothetical -- it's quite real. Raspberry Pi's running Debian were deemed susceptible to this exact problem in November 2015. So designed and implemented a client (shell script that runs at boot, and fetches some entropy from one to many sources), as well as a high-performance server (golang). The client is the 'pollinate' script, which runs on the first boot of every Ubuntu server, and the server is the cluster of physical machines processing hundreds of requests per minute at entropy.ubuntu.com. Many people helped review the design and implementation, including Kees Cook, Jamie Strandboge, Seth Arnold, Tyler Hicks, James Troup, Scott Moser, Steve Langasek, Gustavo Niemeyer, and others.

8. The Orange Box (May 2014)

In December of 2011, in my regular 1:1 with my manager, Mark Shuttleworth, I told him about these new "Intel NUCs", which I had bought and placed them around my house. I had 3, each of which was running Ubuntu, and attached to a TV around the house, as a media player (music, videos, pictures, etc). In their spare time, though, they were OpenStack Nova nodes, capable of running a couple of virtual machines. Mark immediately asked, "How many of those could you fit into a suitcase?" Within 24 hours, Mark had reached out to the good folks at TranquilPC and introduced me to my new mission -- designing the Orange Box. I worked with the Tranquil folks through Christmas, and we took our first delivery of 5 of these boxes in January of 2014. Each chassis held 10 little Intel NUC servers, and a switch, as well as a few peripherals. Effectively, it's a small data center that travels. We spend the next 4 months working on the hardware under wraps and then unveiled them at the OpenStack Summit in Atlanta in May 2014. We've gone through a couple of iterations on the hardware and software over the last 4 years, and these machines continue to deliver tremendous value, from live demos on the booth, to customer workshops on premises, or simply accelerating our own developer productivity by "shipping them a lab in a suitcase". I worked extensively with Dan Poler on this project, over the course of a couple of years.

10. petname / golang-petname / python-petname (January 2015)

From "warty warthog" to "bionic beaver", we've always had a focus on fun, and user experience here in Ubuntu. How hard is it to talk to your colleague about your Amazon EC2 instance, "i-83ab39f93e"? Or your container "adfxkenw"? We set out to make something a little more user-friendly with our "petnames". Petnames are randomly generated "adjective-animal" names, which are easy to pronounce, spell, and remember. I curated and created libraries that are easily usable in Shell, Golang, and Python. With the help of colleagues like Stephane Graber and Andres Rodriguez, we now use these in many places in the Ubuntu ecosystem, such as LXD and MAAS.

If you've read this post, thank you for indulging me in a nostalgic little trip down memory lane! I've had an amazing time designing, implementing, creating, and innovating with some of the most amazing people in the entire technology industry. And here's to a productive, fun future!

I learned earlier this morning that Dennis Ritchie, one of the fathers of the C programming and UNIX as we know it, passed away. Thank you so much, Mr. Ritchie, for the immeasurable contributions you've made to the modern world of computing! I think I'm gainfully employed and love computer technology in the way I do, and am in no small ways indebted to your innovation and open contributions to that world.

Sadly, I've never met "dmr", but I did have a very small conversation with him, via a mutual friend -- Jon "maddog" Hall (who wrote his own farewell in this heartfelt article).

A couple of years ago, I created the update-motd utility for Ubuntu systems, whereby the "message of the day", traditionally located at /etc/motd could be dynamically generated, rather than a static message composed by the system's administrator. The initial driver for this was Canonical's Landscape project, but numerous others have found it useful, especially in Cloud environments.

A while back, a colleague of mine complemented the sheer simplicity of the idea of placing executable scripts in /etc/update-motd.d/ and collating the results at login into /etc/motd. He asked if any Linux or UNIX distribution had ever provided a simple framework for dynamically generating the MOTD. I've only been around Linux/UNIX for ~15 years, so I really had no idea. This would take a bit of old school research into the origins of the MOTD!

At this point, I reached out to colleagues Rusty Russell and Jon "maddog" Hall, and asked if they could help me a bit more with my search. Rusty said that I would specifically need someone with a beard, and CC'd "maddog" (who I had also emailed :-)

Maddog did a bit of digging himself...if by "digging" you mean emailing the author of C and Unix! I had a smile from ear to ear when this message appeared in my inbox:

Jon 'maddog' Hallto Dustin on Tue, Apr 20, 2010 at 10:08 PM:

> A young friend of mine is investigating the origins of /etc/motd. I> think he is working on a mechanism to easily update that file.>> I think I can remember it in AT&T Unix of 1977, when I joined the labs,> but we do not know how long it was in Unix before that, and if it was> inspired by some other system.>> Can you help us out with this piece of trivia?

Ah, a softball!MOTD is quite old. The same thing was in CTSS and thenMultics, and doubtless in other systems. I suspecteven the name is pretty old. It came into Unix early on.

I haven't looked for the best citation, but I bet it's easilyfindable: one of the startling things that happenedon CTSS was that someone was editing the passwordfile (at that time with no encryption) and managedto save the password file as the MOTD.

"When a user sits down at his desk (console), he finds a "message of the day". It is tailored to his specific interests, which are of course known by the system."

Brilliant! So it wasn't so much that update-motd had introduced something that no one had ever thought of, but rather that it had re-introduced an old idea that had long since been forgotten in the annals of UNIX history.

I must express a belated "thank you" to Dennis (and maddog), for the nudges in the right direction. Thank you for so many years of C and UNIX innovation. Few complex technologies have stood the test of time as well as C, UNIX and the internal combustion engine.